Maze Runner: The Death Cureshould have no trouble sprinting to the top of the North American box office this weekend with a debut of $20 million or more.

The threequel is the final installment in the successful YA film series adapted from James Dashner’s dystopian-themed books.

From 20th Century Fox,The Death Curewas originally set to hit theaters a year ago, but its release delayed when franchise star Dylan O’Brien was injured while filming. Wes Ball directed all three films, the last of which,Maze Runner: The Scorch Trialslaunched to $30.6 million in September 2015. The first outing,The Maze Runner, opened to $32.5 million in September 2014.

This time out, the Gladers travel to the villainous WCKD headquarters to rescue their friends.

The Death Cureis also making a play overseas, where it took in a solid $15 million from a handful or markets.

Sony’s holiday hitJumanji: Welcome to the Jungle, which heads into its sixth weekend, has won the domestic box-office race the past three frames.

Elsewhere, Scott Cooper’s gritty WesternHostiles, starring Christian Bale and Rosamund Pike, rides into 2,813 theaters across the country after playing in select cinemas since Christmas. Distributor Entertainment Studios is hopeful that the period pic, grossing $1.6 million to date, will garner $10 million this weekend.

WhileHostileswas shut out of the Oscar race, a flurry of films picking up top nominations earlier this week will look for aboost this weekend, including Steven Spielberg’sThe Post(20th Century Fox) and Guillermo del Toro’sThe Shape of Water(Fox Searchlight), both of which were among the nine titles landing best picture noms.

Shape of Water, which has been rolling slowly, swims into roughly 1,600 locations, an uptick of more than 600 theaters. The adult fairy tale, earning $21 million to date for Fox Searchlight, scored a total of 13 Oscar nominations, the most of any movie.

Other best picture nominees that could see an uptick in sales includeCall Me by Your Name(Sony Pictures Classics),Darkest Hour(Focus Features),Lady Bird(A24),Phantom Thread(Focus Features) andThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri. All these titles, along withShape of Water, are the sort of specialty films that rely on awards season heighten their profiles.